We asked 10Best and USA TODAY readers to vote for the Best Presidential Attraction in the 10Best Readers' Choice awards, and one of the largest nominees took home top honors. At winning Mount Rushmore, the country's early presidents appear larger than life, and in nearby Rapid City, S.D., the City of Presidents attraction commemorates past and present Commanders in Chief with life-size bronze statues. Wirepec Getty Images/iStockphoto

At the runner-up Ronald Reagan Presidential Library in Los Angeles, visitors can walk through a replica of his Oval Office and board an actual Air Force One. Flickr/Ming-yen Hsu

The third place Hermitage, the plantation estate of Andrew Jackson located just outside of Nashville, gives visitors insight into what life was like on an early nineteenth century cotton plantation. Flickr/Rennett Stowe

Overlooking the Atlantic Ocean near Boston, fourth place finisher JFK Presidential Library & Museum celebrates the life of the nation's thirty-fifth president with a collection of historical materials and memorabilia from his life. Massachusetts Office of Travel & Tourism

Theodore Roosevelt's trip to Dakota Country as a young man inspired him to go on and help create five national parks during his presidency. After his death, President Truman established Theodore Roosevelt National Park in his honor. The park came in at number five. Medioimages/Photodisc Getty Images

In sixth place, Monticello, Thomas Jefferson's former home outside Charlottesville, Va. is considered one of the country's great historical estates and an excellent way to learn about the life and times of a Founding Father. Flickr/Tony Fischer

More than 80 million people have visited seventh place Mount Vernon -- the home of the nation's first president -- since 1860, making it one of the country's most popular historic homes. Pierrette Guertin Getty Images/iStockphoto

The Lincoln Memorial, coming in eighth, at the National Mall has become one of Washington, D.C.'s most iconic landmarks. FrozenShutter Getty Images/iStockphoto

Our number nine finisher, the White House has served as the home and workplace of every US President since John Adams in 1800. Huyangshu Getty Images/iStockphoto

Rounding out the top 10, the Sixth Floor Museum located in the former Texas School Book Depository building in Dealey Plaza in Dallas, chronicles the assassination of President John F. Kennedy and its effect on history. Aneese Getty Images/iStockphoto

The following 10 presidential attractions earned nominations but didn't quite make the top 10. An easy day trip from Boston, Adams National Historic Park served as the home of two American Presidents, John Adams and John Quincy Adams. National Park Service

President Eisenhower's old farm, located adjacent to Gettysburg Battlefield, now sits within Eisenhower National Historic Site. Jeff Goulden/iStock

Ford's Theatre in Washington, D.C. was the site of one of history's greatest presidential tragedies, when President Abraham Lincoln was shot and killed there on April 14, 1865. Flickr/AbsolutSara

The Franklin D. Roosevelt Memorial opened in Washington, D.C. in 1997 to commemorate the president who led the nation through the Great Depression. Steven Heap Getty Images/iStockphoto

At Orlando's Hall of Presidents in the Magic Kingdom, each of the US presidents -- past and present -- comes to life in what was one of the world's first Audio-Animatronics displays. Walt Disney World/Gene Duncan

Montpelier was the home of the fourth president, James Madison, and his wife Dolley, and currently houses his Presidential Library as well. Flickr/Michael M. S.

The Kennedy Center in Washington, DC has ties to two presidents -- Dwight D. Eisenhower who signed the bill to create a National Cultural Center and John F. Kennedy who raised money for the center. Sabine Kullak Getty Images/iStockphoto

The columned rotunda of the Thomas Jefferson Memorial sits on the banks of the Tidal Basin in Washington, DC -- a favorite spot in springtime for cherry blossom viewing. BackyardProduction Getty Images/iStockphoto

Weary of the cold winters in the capital, President Truman spent 175 days of his term in office at his home in Key West, today known as Truman's Little White House. Flickr/Roger Wollstadt

The Washington Monument -- a white obelisk in the middle of the National Mall -- is the tallest structure in the nation's capital (and offers one of its best views). andreiorlov Getty Images/iStockphoto